Juno gemes biography template

juno gemes biography template

Juno Gemes: Australian photographer (1944-) | Biography ...

    Juno Gemes (born ) is a Hungarian-born Australian activist and photographer, best known for her photography of Aboriginal Australians.

Juno Gemes: Publications: The Language of Oysters

  • Photographer and social justice activist Juno Gemes (b.
  • Juno Gemes - National Portrait Gallery people

      Judy Juno Gemes (born ) is a Hungarian-born Australian photographer, who specialises in photographs of Aboriginal Australians.

    Juno Gemes: Photographer

      Juno Gemes (born 1944) is a Hungarian-born Australian activist and photographer, best known for her photography of Aboriginal Australians.
    Juno Gemes began the arduous process of making the invisible become a luminous presence through the lens of the camera.
    Photographer and social justice activist Juno Gemes (b.
    Born: 1944 Budapest, Hungary.

    Contact - Juno Gemes

      Juno Gemes was one of ten photographers invited to photograph the apology in the Parliment of Australia on 13th of February VIEW THE IMAGES AND ESSAY.

    Juno Gemes: Ode to Oysters

  • Gemes was born in Budapest, and moved to Australia with her family in 1949.
  • Juno Gemes - Wikipedia

  • Interview with Juno Gemes, October 1995, discussing her forthcoming photographic book.
  • Juno Gemes

    Australian photographer

    Juno Gemes (born 1944) is a Hungarian-born Australian activist and photographer, best known for her photography of Aboriginal Australians.[1] A performer, theatre director, writer and publisher, Gemes was one of the founders of Australia's first experimental theatre group The Human Body.

    Early life

    Juno Gemes was born in 1944 in Budapest, emigrating to Australia with her parents Alex and Lucy Gemes[2] in 1949.[3]

    Career

    Theatre

    Gemes studied at the University of Sydney and the National Institute of Dramatic Art (NIDA) and graduated in 1964.[4] In 1968 Gemes directed The Human Body Australia's first experimental theatre group, established with Johnny Allen and Clem Gorman.[5][6] Some of The Human Body Performances at the Powerhouse warehouse in Haymarket, featured a geodesic light dome built by Jacky Joy Jacobson and Michael Glasheen from 5,000 light bulbs.[7

    Juno Gemes, National Portrait Gallery

  • Photographer and social justice activist, Juno Gemes has spent much of her long career documenting the lives and struggles of First Nations.
  • Juno Gemes -